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Is the word ‘twice’ disappearing from modern English?
Is it being replaced by the term ‘two times’?
They are exact synonyms—so using one or the other does not change the meaning.
I have encountered one website that claims there is a difference—that ‘twice’ always refers to succession while ‘two times’ refers to something which is countable.
That’s completely idiotic.
There is no such distinction.
They mean exactly and precisely the same thing.
‘Twice’ is the older of the two expressions, coming from the days when the Anglo-Saxons spoke Old English more than a thousand years ago.
‘Two times’ is recorded from 1450 and comes from the cardinal number ‘two’ (which was rather more like ‘twain’ in Old English).
Another claim being made these days is that ‘twice’ is seen as a formal word, and is used more often in writing, while ‘two times’ is more informal and is likely to found in conversation.
Perhaps.
But I’m sure this was not always the case.
For some reason exact words such as ‘twice’ seem inclined to fade in our modern world and be replaced by what strike me as more childish versions, such as ‘two times.’
Young children will understand, and say, ‘two times’ some years before they learn the word ‘twice’ (if they ever do).
So, to my (ancient) ears ‘two times’ sounds infantile, while ‘twice’ sounds adult.
But things do seem to be changing—as the frequency of use figures tell us.
The form ‘two times’ appears around one thousand times per million words in English, while ‘twice’ appears on average around thirty times per million words.
The related word ‘thrice’ has suffered even more from this steady dumbing down of our society.
‘Thrice’ now only appears around once per million words.
But I am convinced ‘twice’ was more common back in our grandparents’ and great-grandparents’ day.
So, are you going to say, ‘I walk to the park twice a day’ or ‘I walk to the park two times a day’?
In other words, are going to sound literate?
Or illiterate?
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